Supercharged substitution with :Subvert

#48

Run time:
7:09

Apr 22, '13

Apr 22, 2013

The abolish plugin provides a command called :Subvert, which is like a supercharged version of Vim’s built-in :substitute command. The :Subvert command is especially useful for changing singular and plural variants of a word, and for refactoring names that appear in snake_case and MixedCase.

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In Episode 47, we saw how the :Subvert command can be used as a smart search command. In this episode, we learn about this form of the :Subvert command:

:[range]Subvert/target/replacement/[flags]

:Subvert behaves a lot like Vim’s standard :substitute command: it accepts the same flags and operates the same way over a range, but the target and replacement fields are handled differently.

Suppose that we wanted to change the word pumpkin to potato. We could use the :Subvert command:

:%S/pumpkin/potato/g

This looks a lot like Vim’s built-in :substitute command. In fact, if we used a lowercase s then this would be a valid :substitute command. But :Subvert does a bit of extra work for us. Not only will it change pumpkin to potato, it will also change Pumpkin to Potato, and even PUMPKIN to POTATO.

Working with irregular plurals

The plural form of potato is irregular: it ends with -es. We can adapt the :Subvert command from above to handle singular and plural forms like this:

:%S/pumpkin{,s}/potato{,es}/gc

This will change pumpkins to potatoes and pumpkin to potato. That’s pretty handy!

We could also use the :Subvert command to switch from a word with irregular singular/plural forms to a regular word. Suppose we needed to change mouse to trackpad. The :Subvert command could handle it like this:

%S/m{ouse,ice}/trackpad{,s}/gc

This command will change mouse to trackpad and mice to trackpads. As before, it will work for Titlecase and SHOUTYCASE variants too.

Working with snake_case and MixedCase

The :Subvert command can also target snake_case and MixedCase forms of a word. Suppose that we needed to change insert_mode to replace_mode. We could use this command:

:%S/insert_mode/replace_mode/gc

Not only will this change insert_mode to replace_mode, but it will change InsertMode to ReplaceMode, and INSERT_MODE to REPLACE_MODE as well. That can be really handy when refactoring code.

Swapping words

We could use the :Subvert command to swap all occurrences of vim and tmux in this tweet:

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